The Literary panorama, Volume 5, Issue 18091809 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 1
... land - carriage , to the prosperity of a country , need not be dwelt upon . " Next to the general influence of the seasons , upon which the regular supply VOL . V. [ Lit. Pan , Oct. 1808. ] " of our wants , and a great proportion of our ...
... land - carriage , to the prosperity of a country , need not be dwelt upon . " Next to the general influence of the seasons , upon which the regular supply VOL . V. [ Lit. Pan , Oct. 1808. ] " of our wants , and a great proportion of our ...
Page 19
... land carriage . About fifty years ago the late Marquis of Downshire was travelling through Galloway , haring labourers with their tools attending his coach , which was then a necessary part of the retinue ; but notwithstanding that pre ...
... land carriage . About fifty years ago the late Marquis of Downshire was travelling through Galloway , haring labourers with their tools attending his coach , which was then a necessary part of the retinue ; but notwithstanding that pre ...
Page 21
... lands lying conti- guous to a turnpike road are now well known . It may be fairly reckoned , that they increase the ... land . Elusions . An act has also been obtained for the shire of Wigton , in which is a clause prohibiting any road ...
... lands lying conti- guous to a turnpike road are now well known . It may be fairly reckoned , that they increase the ... land . Elusions . An act has also been obtained for the shire of Wigton , in which is a clause prohibiting any road ...
Page 31
... land , his own , own Albion , should be prompted to adopt with honest fervency and commendable partiality , the language of Thomson : — Oh blest Britannia ! -Guardian of mankind ! Eternal verdure crowns Her meads : her gardens smile ...
... land , his own , own Albion , should be prompted to adopt with honest fervency and commendable partiality , the language of Thomson : — Oh blest Britannia ! -Guardian of mankind ! Eternal verdure crowns Her meads : her gardens smile ...
Page 35
... land , called by the Arabs the Nose of the Desart : we travelled in the night , to endeavour to steal a march , and thereby avoid the Rushwans . Between Sferris and Hagley begins the salt lake . We travelled to the south of it , close ...
... land , called by the Arabs the Nose of the Desart : we travelled in the night , to endeavour to steal a march , and thereby avoid the Rushwans . Between Sferris and Hagley begins the salt lake . We travelled to the south of it , close ...
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Common terms and phrases
advantage America animal appears army attention Bayonne body Britain British Buonaparte called cause character church circumstances colonies command considerable convention of Cintra court Curaçao Ditto duty effect emperor enemy England English expence favour feet Ferdinand VII fire France French Gray's Inn Holy honour horses important India inhabitants island Jamaica king kingdom labour Ladrones lady land language late Leeward Islands Lisbon Liverpool London Lord Madrid majesty Majesty's manufactures means ment minister nation nature neral observed occasion officers opinion Oporto Panorama persons Petersburgh port Portugal possession present Prince prince of Asturias principles produce received remarks rendered respect river roads royal Scotland sent shew ships Spain Spaniards Spanish stone Street Sugar supposed taken theatre tion town trade troops vessels whole wool
Popular passages
Page 573 - Looking tranquillity! It strikes an awe And terror on my aching sight; the tombs And monumental caves of death look cold, And shoot a chillness to my trembling heart.
Page 577 - Parliament accordingly ; and the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and the knights, citizens, and burgesses, and the commissioners for shires and burghs, of the House of...
Page 325 - ... where the sheep were feeding at large, in short, the view of the streams and rivers, convinced us that there was not a single useless or idle word in the above-mentioned description, but that it was a most exact and lively representation of nature. Thus will this fine passage, which has always been admired for its elegance, receive an additional beauty from its exactness. After we had walked, with a kind of poetical enthusiasm, over this enchanted ground, we returned to the village.
Page 387 - To have submitted our rightful commerce to prohibitions and tributary exactions from others, would have been to surrender our independence. To resist them by arms was war, without consulting the state of things, or the choice of the nation.
Page 393 - Petition of the Lord Mayor, Aldermen, and Commons of the City of London, in Common Council assembled.
Page 849 - insurrection," the glorious efforts of the Spanish people in behalf of their legitimate Sovereign, and in defence of the independence of their country ; thus giving the sanction of His Imperial Majesty's authority to an usurpation which has no parallel in the History of the World.
Page 845 - We unite in entreating your Majesty to listen to the voice of humanity, silencing that of the passions ; to seek, with the intention of arriving at that object, to conciliate all interests, and by that means to preserve all the powers which exist, and to ensure the happiness of Europe and of this generation, at the head of which Providence has placed us.
Page 387 - ... and commerce, we have happily so far kept aloof from their calamitous conflicts, by a steady observance of justice towards all, by much forbearance, and multiplied sacrifices. At length however, all regard to the rights of others having been thrown aside, the belligerent Powers have beset the highway of commercial intercourse with Edicts which taken together expose our commerce and mariners, under almost every destination, a prey to their fleets and armies. Each party indeed would admit our commerce...
Page 779 - The bridge is 42 feet wide, and the wooden superstructure is enclosed and covered with a shingle roof. The want of bridges south of Pennsylvania, even on the main post road, is sensibly felt. One lately thrown across the Potomac three miles above the city of Washington, and which without any intervening piers is wholly suspended to iron chains extending from bank to bank, deserves notice on account of the boldness of its construction and of its comparative cheapness. The principle of this new plan,...
Page 325 - As we ascended the hill, the variety of beautiful objects, the agreeable stillness and natural simplicity of the whole scene, gave us the highest pleasure. We at length reached the spot, whence Milton undoubtedly took most of his images; it is on the top of the hill, from which there is a most extensive prospect on all sides: the distant...